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The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts

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The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts. / Tillmar, Malin; Ahl, Helene; Berglund, Karin et al.
In: Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places, Vol. 16, No. 5, 14.09.2022, p. 808-828.

Research output: Contribution to Journal/MagazineJournal articlepeer-review

Harvard

Tillmar, M, Ahl, H, Berglund, K & Pettersson, K 2022, 'The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts', Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places, vol. 16, no. 5, pp. 808-828. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEC-12-2020-0208

APA

Tillmar, M., Ahl, H., Berglund, K., & Pettersson, K. (2022). The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts. Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places, 16(5), 808-828. https://doi.org/10.1108/JEC-12-2020-0208

Vancouver

Tillmar M, Ahl H, Berglund K, Pettersson K. The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts. Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places. 2022 Sept 14;16(5):808-828. Epub 2021 Aug 16. doi: 10.1108/JEC-12-2020-0208

Author

Tillmar, Malin ; Ahl, Helene ; Berglund, Karin et al. / The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts. In: Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places. 2022 ; Vol. 16, No. 5. pp. 808-828.

Bibtex

@article{ecb8c91787d34e789570502d7b4addbc,
title = "The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts",
abstract = "Purpose: Contrasting Sweden and Tanzania, this paper aims to explore the experiences of women entrepreneurs affected by entrepreneurialism. This study discusses the impact on their position in society and on their ability to take feminist action. Design/methodology/approach: This paper analysed interviews conducted in the two countries over 15 years, using a holistic perspective on context, including its gendered dimensions. Findings: The results amount to a critique of entrepreneurialism. Women in Sweden did not experience much gain from entrepreneurship, while in Tanzania results were mixed. Entrepreneurialism seems unable to improve the situation for women in the relatively well-functioning economies in the global north, where it was designed. Research limitations/implications: In mainstream entrepreneurship studies, there is a focus on the institutional context. From the analysis, it is apparent that equal attention must be given to the social and spatial contexts, as they may have severe material and economic consequences for entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship. The paper raises questions for further studies on the gendering of markets in different contexts, as well as questions on the urban-rural dimension. Practical implications: In Sweden, marketisation of welfare services led to more women-owned businesses, but the position of women did not improve. The results strongly convey the need for a careful analysis of the pre-existing context, before initiating reforms. Originality/value: The paper adds to the understanding of context in entrepreneurship studies: Africa is largely an underexplored continent and contrasting North and South is an underexplored methodological approach. This paper further extends and develops the model of gendered contexts developed by Welter et al. (2014).",
keywords = "women{\textquoteright}s entrepreneurship,, Sweden-Tanzania, context,, gender,, market,, welfare state,, entrepreneurialism,",
author = "Malin Tillmar and Helene Ahl and Karin Berglund and Katarina Pettersson",
year = "2022",
month = sep,
day = "14",
doi = "10.1108/JEC-12-2020-0208",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "808--828",
journal = "Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places",
issn = "1750-6204",
publisher = "Emerald",
number = "5",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - The gendered effects of entrepreneurialism in contrasting contexts

AU - Tillmar, Malin

AU - Ahl, Helene

AU - Berglund, Karin

AU - Pettersson, Katarina

PY - 2022/9/14

Y1 - 2022/9/14

N2 - Purpose: Contrasting Sweden and Tanzania, this paper aims to explore the experiences of women entrepreneurs affected by entrepreneurialism. This study discusses the impact on their position in society and on their ability to take feminist action. Design/methodology/approach: This paper analysed interviews conducted in the two countries over 15 years, using a holistic perspective on context, including its gendered dimensions. Findings: The results amount to a critique of entrepreneurialism. Women in Sweden did not experience much gain from entrepreneurship, while in Tanzania results were mixed. Entrepreneurialism seems unable to improve the situation for women in the relatively well-functioning economies in the global north, where it was designed. Research limitations/implications: In mainstream entrepreneurship studies, there is a focus on the institutional context. From the analysis, it is apparent that equal attention must be given to the social and spatial contexts, as they may have severe material and economic consequences for entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship. The paper raises questions for further studies on the gendering of markets in different contexts, as well as questions on the urban-rural dimension. Practical implications: In Sweden, marketisation of welfare services led to more women-owned businesses, but the position of women did not improve. The results strongly convey the need for a careful analysis of the pre-existing context, before initiating reforms. Originality/value: The paper adds to the understanding of context in entrepreneurship studies: Africa is largely an underexplored continent and contrasting North and South is an underexplored methodological approach. This paper further extends and develops the model of gendered contexts developed by Welter et al. (2014).

AB - Purpose: Contrasting Sweden and Tanzania, this paper aims to explore the experiences of women entrepreneurs affected by entrepreneurialism. This study discusses the impact on their position in society and on their ability to take feminist action. Design/methodology/approach: This paper analysed interviews conducted in the two countries over 15 years, using a holistic perspective on context, including its gendered dimensions. Findings: The results amount to a critique of entrepreneurialism. Women in Sweden did not experience much gain from entrepreneurship, while in Tanzania results were mixed. Entrepreneurialism seems unable to improve the situation for women in the relatively well-functioning economies in the global north, where it was designed. Research limitations/implications: In mainstream entrepreneurship studies, there is a focus on the institutional context. From the analysis, it is apparent that equal attention must be given to the social and spatial contexts, as they may have severe material and economic consequences for entrepreneurs and entrepreneurship. The paper raises questions for further studies on the gendering of markets in different contexts, as well as questions on the urban-rural dimension. Practical implications: In Sweden, marketisation of welfare services led to more women-owned businesses, but the position of women did not improve. The results strongly convey the need for a careful analysis of the pre-existing context, before initiating reforms. Originality/value: The paper adds to the understanding of context in entrepreneurship studies: Africa is largely an underexplored continent and contrasting North and South is an underexplored methodological approach. This paper further extends and develops the model of gendered contexts developed by Welter et al. (2014).

KW - women’s entrepreneurship,

KW - Sweden-Tanzania

KW - context,

KW - gender,

KW - market,

KW - welfare state,

KW - entrepreneurialism,

U2 - 10.1108/JEC-12-2020-0208

DO - 10.1108/JEC-12-2020-0208

M3 - Journal article

VL - 16

SP - 808

EP - 828

JO - Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places

JF - Journal of Enterprising Communities: People and Places

SN - 1750-6204

IS - 5

ER -